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Act your age? This woman says you don't have to

Older people are defying the ageing process. Writer Catherine Mayer calls it 'amortality'

June 24, 2011 10:35
Catherine Mayer believes that Judaism's focus on the here and now makes Jews particularly prone to amortality

By

John Nathan,

John Nathan

4 min read

We do not grow older the way we used to. Written here, this simple observation seems no more interesting than all the other things that we do not do the way we used to - travel, shop, book restaurants, read, or even give birth…

But as explained by Time magazine journalist Catherine Mayer in her new book, the observation becomes increasingly profound. And so new was the phenomenon when Mayer noticed it, she had to make up a word for it - "amortality".

It is a word which serves as the title of the book and was born when fellow Time journalist and novelist Lev Grosssman asked Mayer to contribute to an annual zeitgeist piece on modern trends. Grossman was looking for 10 ideas that are changing the world. "I suggested that people don't grow old the way they used to," says Mayer, "and Lev said: 'Is there a name for this?' and the word just came right into my head."

Appropriately enough, we are talking about the high-concept idea in Time's 10th-floor offices. London's horizon is speared by the city's newest, spikiest skyscrapers. It is airier here than in Mayer's nearby windowless office, where she works as the magazine's London bureau chief. In the corner lies a dusty armour-plated flak jacket that Mayer last used while reporting from Iraq.

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